CRIMINAL JUSTICE Research Guide - UCF Libraries E524 2002 The 493 articles cover such topics as corrections, crimes, forensics, Handbook of Computer crime investigation Forensic Tools and Technology http://library.ucf.edu/Reference/Guides/CriminalJustice.asp
Extractions: (Aug 22-Dec 2, 2005) Mon - Thu 7:30 a.m. - 1:00 a.m. Friday 7:30 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Saturday 9:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Sunday 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m. more... Quick Links... Hours Contact Us Regional campuses Find a book Find articles Find a database Find a journal F.A.Q. Interlibrary Loan Ask a Librarian My Libraries Account
Extractions: 9:48 am Eastern US Most active forums today: Suspects: Reconsidering Aaron Kosminski (10 posts) Suspects: Motive - what motive? (6 posts) Victims: Who Was Mary Kelly? (5 posts) General Discussion: Motive Motive (5 posts) Victims: Red Leather Cigarette Case... (5 posts) Join the Chat Room! Jack the Ripper: Letters from Hell
Sapphire | Press Articles | The Unspeakable Crime Sapphire Improving rape investigation and victim care According to the HomeOffice British crime Survey, 92% of rapes were against women; http://www.met.police.uk/sapphire/press_articles/unspeakable.htm
Extractions: The Guardian The allegations about an attack on one of Prince Charles's staff have been met with astonishment. But male rape is far more common than you would think The testimony of George Smith, Prince Charles's former valet, in a Sunday newspaper that he had been raped by another royal servant has catapulted a taboo subject into the headlines. Whatever the internal inquiry at St James's Palace discovers (hot tip: not much), male rape has not had such a high profile since TE Lawrence's account of his violation by the Turkish governor of Deraa in 1916. "What for us is interesting is that here we have someone who is an ex-guardsman, trained in combat, saying he was raped by another man," says Adam Chugg, national coordinator of Survivors UK, a support service for male victims of sexual abuse and sexual assault. "In that sense, we hope that it's helpful for victims to see that male rape has got nothing to do with not being 'manly'."
The Michigan Daily Online Ellroy has roots in crime investigation established years before any of his novelswere published. Previous Article Next Article http://www.pub.umich.edu/daily/1997/oct/10-02-97/arts/arts6.html
Extractions: Daily Books Editor To be a writer, you need to write about what you know. But what happens when all you know is crime, death and unresolved investigations? You become a crime novelist, of course. James Ellroy is the author of 13 books, including "L.A. Confidential," recently released in a film adaptation starring Kevin Spacey, Kim Basinger and Danny DeVito. Taking place over eight years of Los Angeles history, "L.A. Confidential" tells the story of police department scandal in the 1950s as seen through the eyes of three members of the LAPD. Ellroy has roots in crime investigation established years before any of his novels were published. Ellroy's memoir, "My Dark Places," recently published in paperback, is the account of his life and his personal experience with crime. Ellroy was 10 years old when his mother was raped and murdered. He had spent the weekend with his father, and received the news stoically. Author James Ellroy confronts his past in the memoir "My Dark Places." "When my mother was murdered in June of '58," Ellroy explained to The Michigan Daily, "I hated her, I lusted after her, I was very much my father's son, I was in his sway completely. He brainwashed me against my mother and at the time of her death my greatest desire, since my parents were divorced, was to live with my father exclusively. And on June 22, 1958, that wish came true."
Criminal Justice Subject Guide This is a guide to finding books, journal articles, electronic databases, crime in Colorado. Denver, CO Colorado Bureau of investigation. Annual. http://library.auraria.edu/findit/subj_guides/social/crimjust.html
Extractions: Related subject guides on psychology, sociology, business, public affairs, law, and statistics are also available. Library of Congress Classification Many books and reference materials in criminal justice may be found in the call number areas listed below. It is a good idea to browse the reference collection on the first floor and the circulating collection on the second floor in the call numbers areas which are pertinent to your subject: HV6001 - HV7220.5 Criminology
Hot Topics Printed Annually for the Federal Bureau of investigation, US Department of Justice . Abstracts and fulltext articles on anything from crime, gangs, http://www.ccm.edu/library/subweb_hot_topics.htm
The Multiracial Activist - ISSUES: Hatred And Hate Crimes http//www.chattanoogan.com/articles/article_59521.asp (December 6, 2004).Crossburning worry The FBI has joined the hate-crime investigation into who http://www.multiracial.com/issues/issues-hatecrimes.html
Crime And Punishment articles and opinion pieces about current crime, statistics, and investigations from About.com. http://www.crime.about.com/newsissues/crime/
Extractions: zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Crime / Punishment Crime / Punishment Essentials ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb); Sign Up Now for the Crime / Punishment newsletter!
Neil F. Johnson - Publications Cyber crime Just how vulnerable are we? by Neil F. Johnson, IT Recruiter Investigating Hidden Information Steganography and Steganalysis by Neil F. http://www.jjtc.com/pub/
Extractions: Winter 2000 F_menu(new Array('NavigationBar21', '../html/cj_editors.html','../assets/images/autogen/CJ_editors_Ns1_1.gif','../assets/images/autogen/CJ_editors_NRs1_1.gif')); F_menu(new Array('NavigationBar22', '../html/cj_archives.html','../assets/images/autogen/CJ_print_Ns1.gif','../assets/images/autogen/CJ_print_NRs1.gif','../html/new_and_newsworthy_archive.html','../assets/images/autogen/CJ_online_Ns1.gif','../assets/images/autogen/CJ_online_NRs1.gif')); DNA Testing: The Next Big Crime-Busting Breakthrough Howard Safir, Peter Reinharz EMAIL RESPOND PRINT T he whole world knows about the extraordinary reduction in crime that New York City has won in recent years by applying a host of innovative new crime-fighting techniques, from computerized crime tracking to quality-of-life policing. But there's a cutting-edge way to slash Gotham's crime rate by another 15 percent: using DNA evidence left behind by criminals to situate them at the scene of the crime. In England, police have pushed DNA profiling to the forefront of crime fighting, helping to solve tens of thousands of crimes. But here in the United States, efforts to expand DNA testing are lagging, in part because of the relentless, if ill-founded, opposition of the American Civil Liberties Union. It's a shame, because not only does the use of DNA testing in law enforcement promise to put more of the guilty behind bars; it has also worked to free innocent people imprisoned for crimes they didn't commit. T he inventor of DNA testinghe gets a small royalty every time investigators use the processis geneticist Alec Jeffreys of Leicester University in England. In the early 1980s, as Jeffreys experimented with extracting DNA from human muscle tissue, he made a remarkable discovery. (Deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA, of course, is the double-helix configuration of protein molecules in cells that determines the inherited genetic characteristics of all living things.) Certain seemingly purposeless segments of human DNA, Jeffreys realized, were in fact "genetic markers," as unmistakably unique to each individual (with the exception of identical twins) as a fingerprint. The genetic markers show up in the nucleus of human cells from blood, bone, hair follicles, saliva, semen, skin, sweat, and other bodily excretions. They're the same from cell to cell and remain so throughout an individual's life.
Extractions: Read today's paper Sign in Register Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Newsblog Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Politics Science Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Technology Travel Been there Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Soulmates dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Feedback Information GNL press office Living our values Newsroom Reader Offers Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Working at GNL Guardian Weekly Money Observer Public Home UK Business Online ... Quiz
Extractions: Read today's paper Sign in Register Go to: Guardian Unlimited home UK news World news Newsblog Archive search Arts Books Business EducationGuardian.co.uk Film Football Jobs MediaGuardian.co.uk Money The Observer Politics Science Shopping SocietyGuardian.co.uk Sport Talk Technology Travel Been there Audio Email services Special reports The Guardian The northerner The wrap Advertising guide Crossword Soulmates dating Headline service Syndication services Events / offers Help / contacts Feedback Information GNL press office Living our values Newsroom Reader Offers Style guide Travel offers TV listings Weather Web guides Working at GNL Guardian Weekly Money Observer Public Home UK Business Online ... Quiz
Extractions: Telephone: (304) 625-2000 NCIC is a computerized index of criminal justice information (i.e.- criminal record history information, fugitives, stolen properties, missing persons). It is available to Federal, state, and local law enforcement and other criminal justice agencies and is operational 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. PURPOSE: The purpose for maintaining the NCIC system is to provide a computerized database for ready access by a criminal justice agency making an inquiry and for prompt disclosure of information in the system from other criminal justice agencies about crimes and criminals. This information assists authorized agencies in criminal justice and related law enforcement objectives, such as apprehending fugitives, locating missing persons, locating and returning stolen property, as well as in the protection of the law enforcement officers encountering the individuals described in the system. ACCESS CONSTRAINTS: All records in NCIC are protected from unauthorized access through appropriate administrative, physical, and technical safeguards. These safeguards include restricting access to those with a need to know to perform their official duties, and using locks, alarm devices, passwords, and/or encrypting data communications.
Boston Bar Association In some crimes electronic hacking or possession of child In some casesforexample, in an investigation of a ring of computer thievesa computer may http://www.bostonbar.org/pub/bbj/bbj0506_03/analysis_4thammend.htm
Extractions: Across the broad spectrum of conduct forbidden by the criminal law, investigators increasingly look to a suspect's computer for evidence. In some crimes - electronic hacking or possession of child Amy Baron-Evans is a partner of in Boston whose practice consists of representing individuals and corporations in criminal investigations, trials and appeals. Like many other developments in the electronic age, the increasing importance of computer evidence in criminal investigations raises new questions for prosecutors, defense counsel, and judges. Law enforcement's focus on computer evidence also raises questions for ordinary citizens and companies, for seizure of a computer may make it difficult for an individual to carry on his ordinary life or for a company to continue to operate at all. Litigating computer searches requires lawyers to adapt constitutional concepts devised in a world where the quill pen ruled to a very different time, when computer use is predominant, at home and at the office.
Justice Canada Vol 3 No 1 eProsecutions at the Crossroads of Computers and crime A recent investigationinto possible healthcare fraud in Barrie, Ontario, also raised vexing http://canada.justice.gc.ca/en/dept/pub/jc/vol3/no1/page4.html
Extractions: e Prosecutions Secretariat shows up to lead the way. This energetic group of four lawyers monitors the impact of technology on the work of prosecutors and participates in a variety of projects, both within the Department of Justice and outside, that relate to technology and the practice of criminal law. The Secretariat, formed in June 2001, also joins the provinces and territories on a working group on cyber crime. And it helps guide police and prosecutors through the mysteries of microchips, cyberspace and electronic games and gadgets. Kimber Johnston FPS e Prosecutions Secretariat that we hope to achieve this, not just for the FPS The e Prosecutions Secretariat allows the FPS to play a critical role in the development of policy, legislation and practices driven by the requirements of the new electronic age says D. A. Bellemare, Assistant Deputy Attorney General (Criminal Law) and head of the FPS Technology is widely used in the commission of crimes, from fraud and money laundering to child pornography and drug trafficking. The technology used in computers and the Internet also generates a thicket of logs, backup files and other trace evidence in digital form.
Justice Canada Vol 1 No 2 Technology is changing both the nature of crime (eg new opportunities for The distinction between the investigative and prosecutorial stages of the http://canada.justice.gc.ca/en/dept/pub/jc/vol1/no2/
Extractions: Vol. 1. No. 2 The traditional role of the prosecutor is familiar and well accepted. The Supreme Court of Canada in 1955 emphasized that the job of the prosecutor is not to obtain a conviction but to bring forward credible evidence of a crime. It should be done firmly but fairly, the country's top court cautioned. While these conceptions still hold true as ever, the role of the prosecutor in the 21st century is far more complex. Last year's annual conference of the Federal Prosecution Service (FPS), The Prosecution Function in the XXIst Century, highlighted many of the new challenges and opportunities facing prosecutors not only in Canada but around the globe. The conference brought together prosecutors from almost every provincial service, the military, and from Australia, Denmark, England and Wales, France, South Africa, Ireland, Netherlands and the United States. The conference heard how criminals have gotten smarter and more sophisticated, budgets have shrunk, and courts have added more complexity to criminal trials and imposed new obligations on the Crown.
Newspaper Articles What is more, this crime has proliferated to all parts of Kosovo. TPIU investigators accompany the local municipal inspectors for health and fire safety http://www.unmikonline.org/civpol/articles/bleeding.htm
Extractions: Neeraj K Singh To a casual passer-by, the Dollar Bar along the Main Highway in Zubin Potok would appear to be the sort of placid countryside pub one would frequent for a quiet release after a hard days work. Then what was the UNMIK Police doing there in such strength on the night of 11th June? They were there to reveal what lay beneath the cloak of apparent serenity a vicious exploitation of young girls illegally smuggled into Kosovo from other East European countries and then forced into prostitution. Three victims of trafficking two Ukrainian and one Moldavian were rescued and repatriated. The Kosovo-Serbian owner of the restaurant is the prime suspect. He may end up in prison or he may evade justice for want of evidence. The point is that no legal system can be the cure for a disease that runs deep in the veins of society. Persons in the Dollar Bar described the suspect as the girls owner, who charged people money for having sex with them. The term owner speaks powerfully of the murky world of flesh trade, where humans are bought by back street peddlers, who then sell them piecemeal every day.
Catalog Of Pub 2002 Frame 4 The first article, The Future of the Judicial Council of the Ninth Describes investigation, sentencing, and supervision unique to federal women http://www.fjc.gov/public/home.nsf/pages/534
Extractions: This brief report was prepared at the request of the Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property of the House Judiciary Committee. Researchers found that in reviewing complaints of judicial misconduct or disability filed pursuant to statute, chief judges of all but one of the circuits have usually applied Judicial Conference standards that call for a restatement of allegations in the complaint and a reasoned response to such allegations. Researchers also found that 80% of the chief judge dismissal orders cited as a reason for dismissal the close relationship between a complainant's allegations and the merits of a decision by the judge who was the subject of the complaint. The report is available only in electronic form.
Sobaka :: Sex, Crimes And Immunity Café talk and pub gossip can easily find its way into the columns of a localnewspaper Following an investigation into the nightclub raids in Prijedor, http://www.diacritica.com/sobaka/2003/immunity.html
Extractions: April 25, 2003 Call it "Rupert's Law." By stoking public fears over a handful of high-profile child abductions over the last year, American media outlets played a decisive role in passing one of the most sweeping pieces of legislation through Congress in recent years, dealing with a wide variety of public safety and child protection issues. more articles by cali ruchala search diacritica.com email cali ruchala The Amber Alert Law is intended to provide near-instantaneous regional police mobilization when a child is reported abducted and the "Amber alert" (named after Amber Hagerman , a child abducted in 1996) is sounded. But a number of other provisions were tacked on to the bill before its passage. Among them: amendments to previous laws which would hold club owners accountable for drug-use by their patrons, extending the prison terms of repeat sex offenders, and a new version of the 1996 law aimed at striking down virtual child pornography. Though little has been said about it, the most controversial of the provisions tacked on to the Amber Alert Law is one inflicting harsh penalties on Americans who travel abroad to indulge in sexual activity considered forbidden fruit at home, sometimes known as "sex tourism." No one opposes it in principle, yet the ramifications, should prosecutors elect to enforce the law vigorously, could shake the United Nations and the US military establishment to their core.